this post was submitted on 18 Nov 2024
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Asking Valve to crack down on hate-speech and extremist behavior? Sounds great. There's some really awful shit on there and I'd love it if they'd do something about it before it becomes fully entrenched as a Nazi bar.
Edit: I'd also love to hear why the folks who apparently disagree feel that way. Is it because other platforms are worse? Because they are, but that doesn't mean our platform should be allowed to be bad, too. Is it because it's a gaming platform and you want to keep the politics out of our hobby? I'm with you, but this isn't really political per se, and it's not like he's specifically targeting Steam - as the article notes, he's been drawing attention to this sort of thing on a variety of platforms, so why is it suddenly objectionable to you that he's calling Steam out?
I guess what I'm getting at is, why not engage in a discussion about it? The downvotes here suggest that you have an opinion on the topic, so why not share it?
The specific behavior that's being called out here - antisemitic, Nazi, sexuality- or gender-based hate, and white supremacist content - are pretty common definitions of hate speech and extremist behavior. Either way, he calls out Valve's own internally written content policies - which he states aren't being enforced - as the point of contention; he doesn't seem to be imposing outside views on them.
Then Steam becomes X or Truth Social, I guess? I think the chances of that happening are incredibly slim. A more likely negative outcome would be the terms being interpreted to broadly and positive speech being limited along with the negative, but to your point
Aren't you the one committing the slippery slope fallacy here? You're seemingly suggesting that a crackdown on hate speech will lead to or open the door to a bunch of negative outcomes.
If you're defining 'free speech' as the ability to say whatever you want, wherever you want (including on private platforms), without facing consequences, then no, I don't support (your rigid definition of) free speech. I think that's a ridiculous definition to use, though, and I don't think it should be viewed as black or white. 'Free speech absolutism' is what leads to misinformation on the scale we're currently seeing (in the US). Furthermore, 'free speech' as outlined in the first amendment doesn't apply here at all.
Regardless, I don't like the idea of my kid (or any kids) being exposed to Nazi, white supremacist, or discriminatory rhetoric when he's on a gaming platform. Since that's specifically what Warner claims to be addressing here, I support calling it into question.